Sierra Nevada Ensatina - Ensatina eschscholtzii platensis
In the past two weeks, we got more rain, snow, and cold weather, followed by hot and sunny days with temperatures in the 70's!!! Pretty crazy, but we're not complaining as everything is green, lush, and damp, the perfect conditions for many plants and animals to thrive!
Fallen, Damp, Dead Trees house many Critters!
Sierra Nevada Ensatina
These past few months I've renewed my interest in what lives under the bark of trees. I'm always very careful to lift off the bark without crushing a critter, and always carefully put it back. To my delight, during this past winter and early spring, the damp bark and tree trunks I investigated were housing a wide variety of critters! One afternoon, under a piece of thick Ponderosa Pine bark that was lying on the ground, I found a tiny Sierra Nevada Ensatina!!! WOW! The last time I saw one of these was 35 years ago. How lucky to find one again! What a little BEAUTY! It was so colorfully marked with orange patches and a galaxy of tiny white dots! Since it didn't have orange blotches on its back, I'm pretty sure that it was a juvenile!
Sierra Nevada Ensatina - Ensatina eschscholtzii platensis
They are fascinating, uncommon, tiny creatures that thrive in damp conditions! In brief, they are lungless salamanders that live in damp environments. They do not live in, or lay their eggs in, ponds or streams. They prefer to be under damp, moist forest litter, logs, or bark. In the hot and dry months of summer, they stay underground. The following information about them is from https://www.californiaherps.com/
"Life History and Behavior"
"A member of family Plethodontidae, the Plethodontid or Lungless Salamanders.
Plethodontid salamanders do not breathe through lungs. They conduct respiration through their skin and the tissues lining their mouth. This requires them to live in damp environments on land and to move about on the ground only during times of high humidity. (Plethodontid salamanders native to California do not inhabit streams or bodies of water but they are capable of surviving for a short time if they fall into water.)
All Plethodontid Salamanders native to California lay eggs in moist places on land.The young develop in the egg and hatch directly into a tiny terrestrial salamander with the same body form as an adult. (They do not hatch in the water and begin their lives as tiny swimming larvae breathing through gills like some other types of salamanders.)
Activity: Ensatina live in relatively cool moist places on land becoming most active on rainy or wet nights when temperatures are moderate. They stay underground during hot and dry periods where they are able to tolerate considerable dehydration. They may also continue to feed underground during the summer months. High-altitude populations are also inactive during severe winter cold. Longevity has been estimated at up to 15 years.
Diet and Feeding: Ensatinas eat a wide variety of invertebrates, including worms, ants, beetles, spiders, scorpions, centipedes, millipedes, sow bugs, and snails. They expel a relatively long sticky tongue from the mouth to capture the prey and pull it back into the mouth where it is crushed and killed, then swallowed. Typically feeding is done using sit-and-wait ambush tactics, but sometimes Ensatinas will slowly stalk their prey.
Reproduction: Reproduction is terrestrial.Mating takes place in Fall and Spring, but may also occur throughout the winter. Stebbins describes an elaborate Ensatina courtship involving the male rubbing his body and head against the female eventually dropping a sperm capsule onto the ground which the female picks up with her cloaca. The female can store the sperm until she determines the time is right to fertilize her eggs. At the end of the rainy season, typically April or May, females retreat to their aestivation site under bark, in rotting logs, or in underground animal burrows, and lay their eggs.
Eggs: Females lay 3 - 25 eggs, with 9 - 16 being average. Females remain with the eggs to guard them until they hatch. In labs, eggs have hatched in 113 - 177 days.
Young: Young develop completely in the egg and probably leave the nesting site with the first saturating Fall rains, or, at higher elevations, after the snow melts.
Habitat: Inhabits moist shaded evergreen and deciduous forests and oak woodlands. Found under rocks, logs, other debris, especially bark that has peeled off and fallen beside logs and trees. Most common where there is a lot of coarse woody debris on the forest floor. In dry or very cold weather, stays inside moist logs, animal burrows, under roots, wood rat nests, under rocks."
Young Stone Centipede - Feather Millipede - Slug
Lithobiomorpha sp. - Brachycybe lecontii - Gastropoda
Underneath the bark of many fallen Ponderosa Pine Trees I almost always saw Stone Centipedes and Brachycybe Feather Millipedes. I also occasionally came across tiny slugs
Stone Centipedes
I mainly saw young Stone Centipedes, but I also came across a few mature adults. The following information about centipedes is from the website bugguide.org.
"Antennae large; one pair of legs per body segment (15-191 pairs, always an odd number); hind legs extend backwards. All possess “poison claws” (prehensors, forcipules) under the head.
This group has lost the compound eyes, and sometimes has no eyes altogether. Instead, its eyes have a single ocellus or a group of ocelli (simple eyes without retinas).
Although they have previously been regarded as wholly carnivorous, feeding primarily on insects but also occasionally slugs and worms, they have been proven to feed on leaf litter, as well as associated small animals."
Brachycybe Feather Millipedes
These millipedes are quite small, 1/2" -3/4" in length, and have no eyes! They live in large colonies of up to a hundred individuals, mainly in rotten logs. The following edited information about them is from https://bdj.pensoft.net/article/50770/
"Brachycybe lecontii can be found in mesic temperate deciduous forests on decaying logs in groups of up to a hundred individuals of multiple generations. They are frequently found in close proximity to fungus and are assumed to feed on the fungal tissue decomposing organic matter such as dead plant material and leaf litter.
An exceptional aspect of Brachycybe millipedes is that they display similar types of social behaviour and occur in persistent colonies of individuals with overlapping generations. Sociality is variously defined as the organisms having one or more of the following characteristics: (1) division of labour with a caste system composed of reproductive and non-reproductive members, (2) cooperation in caring for the young (Only males care for the eggs and subsequent care of juveniles has not been observed.), (3) a shared nest or aggregation space and (4) overlapping generations."
Slugs
I only saw saw two different half-inch slugs in my tree bark/ fallen log investigations. The following information about slugs is from the website https://www.uaf.edu/ces/publications/database/gardening/slugs.php.
"Slugs and snails are terrestrial gastropods. They need a cool, moist environment. Slugs are active when the temperature is between 38° and 88°F, the relative humidity is high and there is little to no wind. Slugs have a reduced shell and are unprotected, soft bodied and susceptible to drying out. For these reasons, they are most active above ground during the night, when temperatures are cooler and the humidity is higher.
Slugs overwinter as adults by hibernating in the topsoil or as eggs. They move by a single muscular foot that secretes a fluid to help in movement. When the fluid dries out it leaves a silvery, slimy trail. If the surroundings are cool and moist, a slug may regularly travel the same route between its shelter and food source.
An individual slug has both male and female reproductive capability. Any slug is capable of laying eggs and producing young slugs after fertilization. Slugs deposit clusters of small, translucent or pearly white eggs that are laid under boards, pots, along edges of garden beds, in soil crevices or other cool, moist shelters. The presence of many small juvenile slugs may indicate a birthing location. Slugs most often lay eggs at the start of late-summer rains, although some slugs lay eggs in early spring.
Their mouth has a rasplike organ that cuts away tender, succulent plant tissue. They typically feed on the soft leaf tissue between leaf veins. Slugs, unlike snails, spend considerable time underground and feed on underground plant parts. Underground slug damage is evident by small, shallow pits on roots and tubers."
Northwestern Fence Lizards - Sceloporus occidentalis occidentalis
Northwestern Fence Lizards
To my complete surprise, I came across five different Western Fence Lizards under pine tree bark in the past month. I had no idea that they overwintered under tree bark! I had always pictured them under logs, or under leaf litter on the forest floor! These two I found a month ago, and it was too cold for them to move. I CAREFULLY placed the bark back over them, without squishing them.
The following information about Western Fence Lizards is from https://californiaherps.com/lizards/pages/s.o.occidentalis.html
"Life History and Behavior"
"Activity: Diurnal. Often seen basking in the sun on rocks, downed logs, trees, fences, and walls. Prefers open sunny areas. Active when temperatures are warm, becomes inactive during periods of extreme heat or cold, when they shelter in crevices and burrows, or under rocks, boards, tree bark, etc. Common and easily encountered in the right habitat. This is probably the species of lizard most often seen in the state due to its abundance in and near populated areas and its conspicuous behavior.
Territoriality: Males establish and defend a territory containing elevated perches where they can observe mates and potential rival males. Males defend their territory and try to attract females with head-bobbing and a push-up display that exposes the blue throat and ventral colors. Territories are ultimately defended by physical combat with other males.
Defense: The tail can break off easily, but it will grow back. The detached tail wriggles on the ground which can distract a predator from the body of the lizard allowing it time to escape.
Diet and Feeding: Eats small, mostly terrestrial, invertebrates such as crickets, spiders, ticks, and scorpions, and occasionally eats small lizards including its own species.
Reproduction: Adults breed in the spring of their second year. Courtship and mating take place from late April to early June. Egg laying occurs 2 - 4 weeks after copulation, usually from June to July. Females lay 1-3 clutches of 3 - 17 eggs (averaging 8) in a season. Females dig small pits in loose damp soil (often at night) where they lay the eggs. Eggs have white leathery shells and measure 8 by 14 mm. Eggs hatch in about 60 days, usually from July to September."
Adult Stone Centipede - Slug - Millipede
Lithobiomorpha - Gastropoda - Tylobolus castaneus
Millipedes
I never saw groups of these Milliipedes, always just one by itself. (I apologize but I inadvertently erased the source of the information below, and can't find it again.)
"Milliipedes are a group of arthropods that are characterized by having two pairs of jointed legs on most body segments; they are known scientifically as the class Diplopoda. Most millipedes are slow-moving detritivores, eating decaying leaves and other dead plant matter; however, some eat fungi or drink plant fluid.
Most millipedes defend themselves with a variety of chemicals secreted from pores along the body. Its primary defense mechanism is to curl into a tight coil, thereby protecting its legs and other vital delicate areas on the body behind a hard exoskeleton. Reproduction in most species is carried out by modified male legs called gonopods, which transfer packets of sperm to females."
This additional info on millipedes is from bugguide.net.
"Habitat: Moist habitats under rocks, rotting logs, organic debris, etc.
Food: usually decaying plant material; a few spp. occasionally carnivorous. Some may feed on living plant tissue.
Life Cycle: Millipedes hatch with 3 pairs of legs, and add segments/legs as they molt; some live up to 7 years.
Remarks: To protect themselves, millipedes coil or roll into a ball; many emit poisonous (e.g., cyanide-containing) or foul substances (e.g., benzoquinones)
"Millipedes lack the structures to bite, pinch, or sting, and are harmless to humans, although the defensive secretions burn if they get into the eyes. Millipedes are non-toxic to humans and can be picked up by hand. Some secretions discolor the skin, with no lasting effects. Some large, cylindrical, tropical species squirt defensive secretions up to a half meter and can blind chickens and dogs." ‒Rowland Shelley"
Nevada Dampwood Termites (workers and soldier) - Zootermopsis nevadensis
Nevada Dampwood Termites
In several of the dead logs I investigated there were colonies of termites! I didn't know that they form colonies with workers, soldiers, kings and queens! The type in our area are Nevada Dampwood Termites. The following information about them is from https://www.nwf.org/Educational-Resources/Wildlife-Guide/Invertebrates/Termites.
"Termites obtain nutrients from wood and plant materials, but they can’t digest their food on their own. Instead they have symbiotic protozoa and bacteria in their guts to break down the tough plant fibers.
Something all termite species share is a caste system. At the lowest level are the workers. These termites are sexually and developmentally immature. Workers take part in building out the nest, locating food, and caring for young. Soldiers are the next step up in the caste system. Like workers, they are immature in form, but in some species, they have well-developed mandibles for defense. Then there are the reproductives (also called alates), winged males and females that are the product of mature colonies. Alates swarm in warm weather and form pairs of males and females. These “primary reproductives” lose their wings and become kings and queens of new colonies.
Dampwood termites also require moisture and move from rotting tree stumps and logs across the forest floor."
Sierra Nevada Ensatina - Ensatina eschscholtzii platensis
Well that was a TON of information about little, damp-wood dwelling critters! Hope you enjoyed it! If you go out investigating on your own, be sure to be mindful of the critters under the wood as you remove and replace it. Thanks!
In my next blog, I'll discuss the plants that thrive in damp, wet, weather!
Also...
What's happening on the river?
Where are all the mammals?
Check back in two weeks for the answers to these questions and more!
After 8 years of posting my blog, I've decided that I'm only going to post my blog every TWO weeks from now on. Check back in two weeks, on April, 12th for my next natural history blog.
Also, check out my latest post on my newly re-opened Damp Earth Blog at dampearthart.blogspot.com